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San Francisco Bay Area Municipal Regional Stormwater Permit (MRP)

San Francisco Bay Area Municipal Regional Stormwater Permit (MRP). Presentation to Regional Water Board March 14, 2007. The Clean Water Act. Municipal Stormwater (MS4) Permits: may be issued system- or jurisdiction-wide

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San Francisco Bay Area Municipal Regional Stormwater Permit (MRP)

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  1. San Francisco Bay AreaMunicipal Regional Stormwater Permit (MRP) Presentation to Regional Water BoardMarch 14, 2007

  2. The Clean Water Act • Municipal Stormwater (MS4) Permits: • may be issued system- or jurisdiction-wide • must include an “effective” prohibition of non-stormwater discharges into municipal storm sewers • Shall require controls to reduce discharge of pollutants to the maximum extent practicable (MEP) 33 USC § 1342(p)(3)(B)

  3. Relevant Court Decisions • Defenders of Wildlife v. Browner (9th Circuit 1999): Congress set MEP as the standard for MS4 permits and did not require more stringent limitations to address water quality standards but gave the Statediscretion to impose additional pollutant control provisions if it determines they are appropriate • City of Burbank v. SWRCB (Cal. Sup. Ct. 2005): Under State law, economic considerationsmust be taken into account with regard to NPDES permit provisions that exceed the Clean Water Act’s requirements • Divers’ v. SWRCB (Cal. Ct. of App. 2006): A Regional Board is notrequired to impose numeric effluent limitations in stormwater discharge permit and may utilize a best management practices (BMP) approach

  4. State Water Board Precedents • Order WQ-91-03: Due to the intermittent and highly variable nature of stormwater discharges, numeric effluent limitations are not required – a best management practices (BMP) approach is acceptable • Orders WQ-99-05 and 2001-15: MS4 permits to contain specific language requiring water quality standards be addressed over time by an iterative process for BMP effectiveness evaluation and improvement/fine tuning

  5. EPA Guidance for Municipal Stormwater Permit Renewals Municipalities should: • describe priorities for implementing controls • identify proposed changes to the MS4’s stormwater management and monitoring programs, including de-emphasizing or even eliminating certain program components Permitting authorities are expressly encouraged to work with municipalities to make such determinations

  6. Bay Area Cities’ Interests • Achieve significant and incremental water quality improvements • Prioritizerequirements to be imposed on local governments • Reducethe administrative burden of municipal stormwater (MS4) permits so as to focus on actual water quality improvements • Establish a level playing field

  7. Key Aspects of Challenge • Combine 6 permitsinto 1 regional permit (MRP) covering 76 municipalities • Provide consistency with adopted TMDLs (mercury, diazinon) and address other identified pollutants of concern (copper, PCBs, dioxin, trash) • Recognize that local resources to address water quality needs (in addition to police, fire protection, parks) are limited, so that the MRP’s requirements must reflect a prioritization

  8. Municipal Cooperation on MRP • Municipal program managers regularly participated in a Regional Board staff-led Steering Committee to try and guide the overall draft permit development process • Municipal staff participated in extensive “work group” sessions on individual components of the MRP (but without attempting to prioritize them) to try and reach consensus with interested persons and RB staff • After vetting with and gaining acceptance from all 76 prospective co-permittees (including on proposed program enhancements and associated budget increases), BASMAA submitted comprehensive, prioritized, and integrated provisions and performance standard tables for use in a draft MRP in September 2006

  9. The Municipalities’ Submission: • Prioritizes required actions based on water quality needs (TMDL and other pollutants of concern to receive more focus and resources) • Incorporates detail directly into the permit • mandatory levels of effort/deliverables • reportingand effectiveness requirements and deadlines • Adds comprehensive water quality monitoring requirements • Requires implementation of the “C.3” new and redevelopment numeric treatment standards down to the 10,000 S.F. level • Requires implementation of hydromodification management plans/programs (HMPs) well in advance of the rest of the State

  10. Enhancement Example: TMDL-Related Requirement – Mercury (1 of 9 Proposed Program Components on Mercury)

  11. Enhancement Example: TMDL-Related Requirements –Diazinon and Related Pesticides Associated with Water Quality Toxicity

  12. Enhancement Example: Trash and Litter Controls

  13. Enhancement Example: Monitoring Related Requirements

  14. “C.3” and HMP Implementation • 76 Bay Area municipalities haveonly recently begun implementing numeric treatment standards down to the 10,000 SF level of projects for all land use types(except single homes) • This required a substantial increase in municipal planning staff to review small (< 1 acre) project proposals for compliance • Unlike elsewhere in the State, the Bay Area approach is not limited to applying these numeric standards only at: • larger sites (> 100,000 SF) with industrial/commercial uses,  • housing developments of 10 or more units, and • significant projects on steep hillsides or located adjacent to sensitive habitats • Desired focus is on solvingchallenges related to implementation of both C.3 and HMP requirements • Just beginning togain experience on implementing these controls and need to assess effectiveness • Changing these requirementsnowwould be confusing and burdensome to developers and municipal planning and redevelopment staff

  15. Why Prioritization is Vital • Bay Area municipalities are at or fast approaching stormwater-related assessment caps and the chances of getting more funding via a 2/3rds vote are not good • Municipalities are increasingly using grant funds to pay for projects but these are limited, do not help with O&M, and are not sustainable for the long-term • Given our inability to increase assessments and the competition with other municipal general revenue needs (police, fire, parks), substantially increasing local stormwater funding is unrealistic • The municipalities’ proposals include a number of enhancements that will cost more so some lower priority items need to be capped, reduced, or even sunsetted – everything cannot be a priority at once !

  16. Requests • Request Board member input as part of today’s workshop, particularly with respect to issues of priorities and prioritization • Request circulation of the municipalities’ proposed provisions and performance standard tables as part of the staff draft MRP for comment • Executive Officer to schedule another workshop to: • inform the Board of comments received • present staff recommendations • obtain direction for Tentative Order content and timing

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